Saba Software to be taken private by Vector Capital

(Reuters) - Enterprise software provider Saba Software Inc, whose chief executive and other executives recently settled charges of accounting fraud, said private equity firm Vector Capital would take it private for about $268 million in cash.

Vector offered $9 per share for the Pink Sheets-listed company, which delisted from the Nasdaq in 2013.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said earlier on Tuesday that two former Saba chief financial officers agreed to repay nearly half a million dollars in combined bonuses and stock profits over the fraud, which involved falsified time-sheets by consultants at an Indian subsidiary.

Founder and former Chief Executive Babak "Bobby" Yazdani agreed in September to repay $2.57 million of bonuses, incentive pay and profit from stock sales.

Yazdani, who founded Redwood Shores, California-based Saba in 1997, resigned as CEO in March 2013.